Director’s push for innovation in Arkansas creates friction with foundation | Current
The Arkansas Educational Television Commission is threatening to sever its relationship with the AETN Foundation unless the fundraising group reinstates the network’s executive director as foundation CEO.
The standoff follows months of friction between the sibling organizations over who will pay for AETN Executive Director Courtney Pledger’s push to refresh the network’s content strategy.
In January, Pledger used foundation funds without board approval to pay an outside contractor with production expertise. She later fired the foundation’s longtime development director, Mona Dixon, who had urged Pledger to follow established financial procedures for securing the foundation board’s approval. When Pledger disregarded that advice, Dixon discussed her concerns about the payment with the board.
At the time, Pledger was head of AETN in Conway and CEO of the foundation, but the foundation board has since removed Pledger as its chief executive.
An Arkansas native with extensive experience in television and film production, Pledger was hired by Gov. Asa Hutchinson in March 2017. She succeeded longtime station leader Allen Weatherly, who died in 2016 .
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson introducing his pick to head AETN, Courtney Pledger, in March 2017. (Photo: Michael Hibblen/KUAR)
During her first two years at AETN, Pledger has pushed for innovation. The state network launched TV and online coverage of state championship games for high school football and basketball. And in February, it premiered a statehouse streaming service , earning praise from Hutchinson. Pledger said the network is also developing streaming educational services.
But the workplace climate has changed for the worse, according to an anonymous March 8 letter signed by “Concerned employees” of AETN and addressed to the foundation board, the commission and the public.
“When Courtney Pledger came onboard, lots of staff were determined to be as positive as possible,” the employees’ letter said. It went on to describe how staff became “tense and wary” during her first year on the job, due in part to “a number of firings or forced retirements.”
Several key managers have left since Pledger arrived, including COO Tony Brooks, who served as interim executive director during the leadership transition and departed in June 2017; and Mike McCullars, who directed projects at the foundation for 28 years before exiting in August 2017. Both former employees declined to comment. The employees’ letter noted that “AETN’s beloved” HR Director Lela Hodges took an early retirement March 31 after 22 years.
Pledger fired Dixon, who was foundation COO and development director, on Feb. 12. Dixon was ushered out of the building that day, ending 33 years of employment at the network, following a monthslong argument with Pledger over payments for a production consultant.
Dixon declined to comment for this story. But on Feb. 26 Dixon detailed her disagreement with Pledger and appealed her termination in a letter to AETN Foundation Chair Lynne Rich and the foundation board.
After receiving Dixon’s appeal, the board removed Pledger as foundation CEO.
Arkansas Business broke the story of the internal conflict March 1 and posted Dixon’s letter to Rich and copies of Dixon’s termination papers .
The AETN commission, a group of citizen representatives appointed by the governor , has backed Pledger in the dispute. Eight commissioners unanimously adopted a resolution voicing support for Pledger during an emergency meeting March 27.
In the resolution, the commission also threatened to terminate its contract with the fundraising foundation unless Pledger is reinstated as CEO and changes are made to its board bylaws. The commission called for instituting term limits for board members and adding two new foundation board members “to provide fresh perspective and ideas.”
“Recent actions of the current foundation board are contrary to the vision and direction of AETN and in conflict with the purpose for which the foundation was created” in 1984, the commission resolution said. “The current working relationship between the commission and the foundation has reached an untenable point.”
The commission set a deadline of last Wednesday for the foundation’s response, then extended that deadline to Friday. “The foundation’s initial response has been given to the commission, and conversations are continuing between the commission and foundation,” AETN spokesperson Tiffany Head said Monday.
Head did not respond to several requests from Current to speak with Pledger and AETN Commission Chair Anne Herrington. Foundation Chair Rich did not respond to several requests for comment.
Rethinking content
Pledger’s media career spanned from Britain to Hollywood: She had worked as a creative consultant for the UK-based Aardman Animations ( Wallace & Gromit , Chicken Run ) and served as production SVP at Radical Studios in Los Angeles, where she developed partnerships with studios including DreamWorks, Disney and Warner Bros.
At a 2017 ceremony marking her appointment as executive director, Hutchinson noted Pledger’s “vision for this agency” and her “incredible background in television,” which included producing for NBC, ABC and CBS. Most recently, Pledger was executive director of the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival. She had taken over the financially troubled festival in 2012; two years later, it was an Oscar-qualifying event for short films.
Rethinking AETN’s content strategy has been a big focus for Pledger, and she wanted to bring in outside advisors to help guide the process. Last August, Pledger approached Dixon about initiating a contract with Team Raney, a content consulting business owned by Rachel Raney, director of national productions and original content at UNC-TV in Research Triangle Park, N.C., according to Dixon’s letter to the foundation chair.
Pledger wanted to work with Raney on “content ideas,” and told Dixon she “did not want to go through the state procurement process and wanted the foundation to pay for the contract,” according to the letter.
Dixon told Pledger that all of the foundation’s funds were earmarked for other projects, and she advised Pledger to ask the foundation board to use money from the capital planning fund. Pledger “said she did not want to go through the foundation board for approval,” Dixon said in the letter. The foundation’s most recent IRS Form 990 said its fundraising revenues support AETN program production and acquisitions, as well as publication of the monthly program guide.
Pledger proposed to pay Team Raney from an account that would violate the foundation’s cash-flow policy and would not adhere to spending previously approved by the board in the FY19 budget, Dixon said in the letter.
At the October 2018 foundation board meeting, Pledger referenced the Team Raney contract in board materials. Chair Lynne Rich later asked Dixon for more details on how Pledger wanted to handle the contract payment. “To protect myself, I felt the only safe way to discuss this freely [with Rich] was to invoke whistleblower protection,” Dixon wrote, recalling her decision to privately approach Rich and seek protection in discussing what Pledger’s proposal.
After the October meeting, Pledger “stopped communicating with me,” the letter said.
‘A breach of trust’
During the board’s December 2018 meeting, members voted unanimously to prohibit the foundation from paying for the Team Raney contract. Members explained that making payments through the foundation would be a violation of state procurement policies and this meant the contract should be the financial responsibility of AETN. “The board instructed the staff that the contract should be canceled immediately” and be paid for by the station, Dixon wrote. “I thought the matter was settled.”
But when Dixon returned from a conference in January, she noticed that Pledger had approved foundation payment of $13,750 to Team Raney over the board’s objections. Dixon notified the board of the payment.
At a special foundation board meeting Feb. 5 to discuss the contract, Dixon’s letter said that board members decided “after much conversation” to make the payment — but from the capital planning fund, as Dixon had originally suggested.
On Feb. 11, Dixon requested a mediation with Pledger through AETN human resources. HR Director Hodges “told me she thought this was a great idea,” Dixon said in the letter.
Pledger fired Dixon the next day. When Dixon asked why, Pledger told her “we are going in a different direction,” according to the letter. COO Ed Leon sat outside her office door as she packed up her things, Dixon said. Her termination papers offered six months’ salary in exchange for Dixon signing a nondisclosure agreement, which she declined to do.
Dixon said in her letter that she believes that Pledger fired her because she tried to explain foundation policies and ensure that they were followed, then informed the board about problems with how Pledger moved ahead with the Team Raney payment.
The employees’ letter said that staff believe that Pledger “is attempting to use the restricted accounts of the foundation for unauthorized purposes.” It also said staff viewed Dixon’s termination as retaliation for challenging the executive director on the payment.
“It is important to remember that the foundation and the state are separate entities for a reason … to make a clear break between state monies and private donor funds,” the employees’ letter said. “Both sides have worked hard to achieve this goal. But since Courtney has come to us, she has caused a breach of trust between the two groups that have worked in successful harmony for decades.”
The employees’ letter notes that legislative auditors identified several problems with AETN for the first time in years, pointing to Pledger’s “outright disregard for state regulations” for the unfavorable review of the network’s accounting and procurement practices.
Those issues included problems with a vendor contract for State of the Art , an hourlong documentary premiering April 26 on PBS. It tells the stories of seven diverse and little-known artists from across the country who were part of an exhibition in Bentonville, Ark. Auditors said AETN “did not follow state procurement law” by handling vendor payments for the program through the foundation instead of the state Department of Finance and Administration.
“At no time did we wish to run afoul of state processes,” the network said in response to the audit. “Given time constraints, our aim was efficiency in securing this opportunity for Arkansas. In the future we will carefully coordinate with the advice and approval” of the Department of Finance and Administration.
The audit also found that: AETN did not issue competitive bids for four vendors’ charges that totaled $157,928; the station engaged services of a special counsel without authorization from the governor; and the station paid two vendors $10,000 for employee training but did not properly document that the training was completed. In addition, the audit faulted Pledger for using a state vehicle without keeping mileage logs.
In each instance, the station responded that it would take corrective measures to ensure future compliance.